Section 16.1. Building iDVDs


16.1. Building iDVDs

Suppose that you've decided to create an iDVD project manually, rather than sharing your iMovie to iDVD. While there's no one best way to put your project together, it helps to have a basic task list to work through. Here are steps for one convenient path through authoring a DVD.

  1. Create a new project .

    In iDVD, a project file isn't a single document on your hard drive. It's actually a package a folder that Mac OS X disguises to look like a single icon. The package contains all of your project settings and materials. (As you know from Chapter 4, iMovie projects are package documents, too.)

  2. Choose a theme .

    Use any of iDVD 6's pre-designed, professional-looking design schemes for your project (or add-on themes you've bought on the Web), as described in the previous chapter.

  3. Add movies and slideshows by hand .

    If you've only created iDVD projects from within iMovie, this is the part that's new to youadding iMovie movies to an iDVD project manually.

  4. Edit your menus .

    Customize the way your menus look. Edit your menu and button titles and add pictures or movies to your drop zones.

  5. Preview and burn the DVD .

    The process ends just as it did in the previous chapter: You look over your work and then feed your Mac a blank DVD to record for posterity.




iMovie 6 & iDVD
iMovie 6 & iDVD: The Missing Manual
ISBN: B003R4ZK42
EAN: N/A
Year: 2006
Pages: 203
Authors: David Pogue

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